Complete Web Design: from Figma to Webflow to Freelancing vs Visual Elements of User Interface Design
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Udemy · Design
Complete Web Design: from Figma to Webflow to Freelancing
Coursera · Design
Visual Elements of User Interface Design
Per-criterion
Across 26 opinions the most consistent praise is the "3-in-1" structure: design theory (layout, typography, visual hierarchy), then designing in Figma, then building the same design live in Webflow with no coding. Reviewers repeatedly call it "a little gem" and note Vako "takes you through essential design theory and then teaches Figma and Webflow" rather than jumping straight to tools. The 18.5–22.5 hours of video and ~199 lessons end in a real portfolio site, which keeps the content concrete. Capped slightly below 5 because the freelancing third is lighter than the design two-thirds.
Vako Shvili is the single strongest recurring theme. Students describe him as "really good", "quite thorough, explaining every detail" and good at "step-by-step explanation". Several highlight that he records a full video review of each student's finished project at the end — unusual for a self-paced Udemy course — and that he keeps videos updated to the latest Figma and Webflow UI (last refreshed April 2026).
On Udemy the course routinely sells around $15 for lifetime access during sales, and multiple reviewers explicitly call it "worth the investment" at that price. One noted it was "enough to launch you on your journey, especially if you combine it with the completely free material found on Webflow University". The honest caveat: a live Webflow site needs a paid Webflow plan beyond the free workspace, an ongoing cost the course price doesn't cover.
The course ends with a fully designed and built portfolio website plus a client-style project and a freelancing plan (portfolio, pricing, outreach). Reviewers value building the exact site they designed, and Vako's end-of-course video critique adds feedback most MOOCs lack. Marked down a little because the projects are guided closely, so the final output looks similar across students rather than fully original.
Figma and Webflow are both industry-standard, and the pipeline (design → build → land clients) maps onto real freelance work. Several students report it gave them enough to start. The realistic ceiling: the freelancing/business module is more of an introduction than a deep system, and the course targets beginners, so experienced designers will find the design theory basic.
The course is the first of two CalArts UI courses inside the broader UI/UX Design Specialization and is structured across five modules completed in roughly two weeks at ten hours per week. It deliberately stays in the "visual" lane: what an interface is, the designer's role, and how meaning is constructed through colour, typography, imagery, grids, and layout hierarchy. Rather than tooling tutorials, it teaches a vocabulary — the formal elements that make an interface read as clear, consistent, and intuitive — through lectures and short visual exercises that culminate in a peer-reviewed final project. Learners repeatedly describe the content as a strong, well-sequenced introduction. Reviewers note that each week builds toward the final project, and that the colour and typography material gives beginners a shared language they previously lacked. One four-star reviewer summarised the consensus: "Contents covered were relevant and instructors explained all the details very well." For someone with no formal design background, the curriculum does exactly what it sets out to do. The recurring and well-evidenced criticism is depth. A meaningful share of three- and four-star reviews describe the material as "way too basic," and practising designers consistently report that the course offers little to upgrade an existing skill set. Several reviewers also flag that it does not teach the Adobe Creative Suite tools (Illustrator in particular) that the final project assumes, so learners can find themselves needing software skills the course never delivers.
The instructor is Michael Worthington, a faculty member in the Program in Graphic Design at CalArts and a co-founder of the Los Angeles design studio Counterspace. His teaching is one of the most reliably praised elements of the course. In an independent walkthrough of the full specialisation, designer Romy von Erlea wrote that the course "focuses on the principles of UI design. It is very instructive, and the explanations are easy to follow," and that Worthington "covers all the basics in a beginner-friendly way, so even the most unprepared of the students will be able to follow up." Reviewers value the clarity and pacing of his lectures, with several noting that the teaching methods and videos were "so insightful" and "covered everything necessary" for a foundation. The grounding in graphic-design fundamentals — rather than the latest UI tooling trend — gives the instruction a durability that purely software-led courses lack. The most pointed criticism of the teaching is aesthetic rather than pedagogical: a small number of one-star reviewers felt the visual examples were dated, with one writing that the course teaches "very strange visual design. Straight out of [the] 90s." This is a minority view, but it recurs often enough to note for learners who expect a contemporary, product-design-led aesthetic.
The course can be fully audited for free, which gives access to all video lectures and exercises. Multiple reviewers — and both independent blog authors who completed the specialisation — cite the free-audit option as the single biggest reason they chose it; Romy von Erlea wrote that "what drew me to this one in particular was that I could do it free of charge." To submit the peer-graded final project and earn a certificate, learners need a Coursera subscription (Coursera Plus is roughly $59/month) or to purchase the specialisation. For beginners, the value proposition is strong: a CalArts-branded visual foundation at zero cost to audit, with a low time commitment. One reviewer noted the course "was fun and easy to get through! Not demanding of my time at all," which makes it an efficient on-ramp before committing to the rest of the specialisation. The value caveat is audience-dependent. Practising designers who pay for the certificate may feel the content does not justify the cost relative to what they already know, and Coursera's subscription billing has drawn general consumer complaints independent of any single course. For learners who only need the visual foundations, auditing for free is essentially unlimited value.
The course is project-anchored: each module builds toward a final design project that learners submit and that is then peer-graded by other students. The project itself is well regarded — reviewers like that the structure "builds up to the final project" and that the early coursework feeding into it was "actually incredibly helpful." As an applied exercise, it does push learners to translate the colour, type, and layout concepts into a concrete artefact rather than absorbing them passively. The friction is the grading mechanism, which is the most contentious aspect of the entire course. Because design quality is subjective and the graders are fellow learners — many of them beginners — reviewers repeatedly report that scores feel arbitrary. One three-star reviewer wrote that "the peer grading system in an abstract field like design is not suited," and a four-star reviewer who praised the content added that "the peer-scoring doesn't work really good though." A further practical gap: the final project leans on Adobe tools the course does not teach. Reviewers advise learning "how to use Illustrator a bit beforehand," and one one-star reviewer complained that the course doesn't "teach one thing on how to use any of the programs in [the] Adobe creative suite." The project is pedagogically sound but its execution depends on external software skills and a peer-grading lottery.
The course teaches transferable visual literacy — colour relationships, typographic hierarchy, imagery, and grid-based layout — that underpins essentially all interface and graphic design work. Reviewers describe it as a genuine foundation rather than a novelty: "a very strong introduction to the concepts and the foundation for understanding UI/UX," in the words of one five-star learner. For someone with zero design background entering a UI/UX career path, that vocabulary is directly applicable to subsequent study and junior-level work. Reddit discussions of the parent specialisation echo this, framing the CalArts courses as an accessible, affordable entry point for UX/UI career transitions, with commenters noting the field is "insanely in-demand right now." The course's principles also carry into adjacent disciplines — graphic design, web design, and presentation design — because it teaches formal visual reasoning rather than a single product workflow. The applicability ceiling is real for experienced practitioners. Several reviewers from a design background concluded it would be "unsuitable if you want to upgrade your skills," and others wanted more depth and modern, product-centred patterns. The course transfers well to real work for beginners building from nothing; it transfers poorly as continuing education for those already working in design.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.